Serena survives at Wimbledon, will meet Venus next

Serena Williams of the United States celebrates winning a point against Heather Watson of Britain during their singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London on Friday.
Serena Williams of the United States celebrates winning a point against Heather Watson of Britain during their singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London on Friday.
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Venus and Serena Williams walked onto their courts at precisely the same time on Friday, Serena to face British No. 1 Heather Watson; Venus to face Aleksandra Krunic. The sisters will walk out at the same time Monday again in the fourth round. This time, to face each other.
Serena defeated Watson 6-2, 4-6, 7-5, while Venus advanced 6-3, 6-2.
“[Watson] was just playing so good there was nothing I could do,” Serena said after the match.
Asked if she will speak to Venus over the weekend, Serena said, “I mean not about the match, but she’s in better form than I am, so I think she has a little bit of an advantage going into that match, but at least one of us will be in the quarterfinal so that’s good.”
For Serena, the victory kept alive her hope of a Grand Slam of two sorts: she’s won both Slam events this year, and with a Wimbledon victory will have won four straight dating back to last year’s U.S. Open. Watson played the match of her life, leading 3-0 in the third and nearly pulling off the stunning upset before Serena turned up her game.
Serena needed just 25 minutes to complete the first set, dropping only three points in her first four service games. Watson struggled with the strength of Serena’s second serves, looking overmatched against the veteran. She also struggled with her own first serves.
But the young Brit showed just how much fight she has in her during a colossal second set. She started playing more aggressively, jumping out to a 0-30 advantage with Serena serving at 2-2. When Serena earned the next point, the 20-time Grand Slam champ was clearly fired up, letting out a loud “Come on!” while pumping her fist.
Watson kept battling back, though, clearly understanding that winning this game could keep her alive in the match. It would prove to be the turning point. As Serena committed a rare error – she double faulted to give Watson the break and the 3-2 advantage – the crowd went wild. No British woman has won Wimbledon since Virginia Wade did so in 1977. Watson was the last British woman remaining in this year’s singles draw, making her the nation’s great hope.
But this is Serena, and she was fired up. A fired up Serena is nearly impossible to beat. She broke Watson back to even the set at 3-3, then held for the 4-3 advantage. Battle on. Watson held for 4-4, then broke again as Serena sent a forehand wide. With Watson serving for the set, Serena failed to convert on a break-point opportunity. Watson capitalized, taking the set 6-4.
The third set was an all-out battle, the score not showing just how many games wavered between deuce, advantage, deuce, advantage. Watson came out on the winning end of the first three.
Trailing 3-0, Serena earned five break-point opportunities. Finally, on the sixth, she got it. She looked absolutely jubilant. She quickly held serve.

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